Scientists and engineers at Picatinny
Arsenal are busy developing a device that will shoot lightning bolts down laser
beams to destroy its target.
Seriously.
Soldiers and science fiction fans,
you’re welcome.
“We never got tired of the lightning
bolts zapping our simulated (targets),” said George Fischer, lead scientist on
the project.
The Laser-Induced Plasma Channel, or
LIPC, is designed to take out targets that conduct electricity better than the
air or ground that surrounds them. How did the scientists harness the seemingly
random path made by lightning bolts and how does a laser help?
To understand how the technology, it
helps to get a brief background on physics.
“Light travels more slowly in gases and
solids than it does in a vacuum,” explained Fischer. “We typically think of the
speed of light in each material as constant. There is, however, a very small
additional intensity-dependent factor to its speed. In air, this factor is
positive, so light slows down by a tiny fraction when the light is more
intense.”
“If a laser puts out a pulse with modest
energy, but the time is incredibly tiny, the power can be huge,” Fischer
continued. “During the duration of the laser pulse, it can be putting out more
power than a large city needs, but the pulse only lasts for two-trillionths of
a second.”
Why is this important?
“For very powerful and high intensity laser
pulses, the air can act like a lens, keeping the light in a small-diameter
filament,” said Fischer. “We use an ultra-short-pulse laser of modest energy to
make a laser beam so intense that it focuses on itself in air and stays focused
in a filament.”
To put the energy output in perspective,
a big filament light bulb uses 100 watts. The optical amplifier output is 50
billion watts of optical power, Fischer said.
“If a laser beam is intense enough, its
electro-magnetic field is strong enough to rip electrons off of air molecules,
creating plasma,” said Fischer. “This plasma is located along the path of the
laser beam, so we can direct it wherever we want by moving a mirror.”
“Air is composed of neutral molecules
and is an insulator,” Fischer said. When lightning from a thunderstorm leaps
from cloud to ground, it behaves just as any other sources of electrical energy
and follows the path of least resistance.
“The plasma channel conducts electricity
way better than un-ionized air, so if we set up the laser so that the filament
comes near a high voltage source, the electrical energy will travel down the
filament,” Fischer elaborated.
A target, an enemy vehicle or even some
types of unexploded ordnance, would be a better conductor than the ground it
sits on. Since the voltage drop across the target would be the same as the
voltage drop across the same distance of ground, current flows through the
target. In the case of unexploded ordnance, it would detonate, explained
Fischer.
Even though the physics behind the
project is sound, the technical challenges were many, Fischer recalled.
“If the light focuses in air, there is
certainly the danger that it will focus in a glass lens, or in other parts of
the laser amplifier system, destroying it,” Fischer said. “We needed to lower
the intensity in the optical amplifier and keep it low until we wanted the
light to self-focus in air.
Other challenges included synchronizing
the laser with the high voltage, ruggedizing the device to survive under the
extreme environmental conditions of an operational environment, and powering
the system for extended periods of time.
“There are a number of high-tech
components that need to run continuously,” said Fischer.
But despite the challenges, the project
has made notable progress in recent months.
“Definitely our last week of testing in
January 2012 was a highlight,” said Tom Shadis, project officer on the program.
“We had a well thought-out test plan and our ARDEC and contractor team worked
together tirelessly and efficiently over long hours to work through the entire
plan.
“The excellent results certainly added
to the excitement and camaraderie,” added Fischer.
As development continues, Shadis said
that those involved with the project never lose sight of the importance of
their work.
“We were all proud to be serving our
warfighters and can picture the LIPC system saving U.S. lives,” Fischer said.
By Jason Kaneshiro, AMC
From www.army.mil
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